Garrard, Kentucky
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Garrard is a coal town in
Clay County Clay County is the name of 18 counties in the United States. Most are named for Henry Clay, U.S. Senator and statesman: * Clay County, Alabama * Clay County, Arkansas (named for John Clayton, and originally named Clayton County) * Clay County, Fl ...
,
Kentucky Kentucky ( , ), officially the Commonwealth of Kentucky, is a state in the Southeastern region of the United States and one of the states of the Upper South. It borders Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio to the north; West Virginia and Virginia ...
, United States on the junction of United States Highway 421 and Kentucky Highway 80, south of
Manchester Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
. It was established in 1806 by
James Garrard James Garrard (January 14, 1749 – January 19, 1822) was an American farmer, Baptist minister and politician who served as the second governor of Kentucky from 1796 to 1804. Because of term limits imposed by the state constitution adopted in ...
's son Daniel (1780–1866) as a salt works, he having bought the land in 1798, but didn't actually gain the name until the Cumberland and Manchester Railroad came through there in 1917. It was through the 19th century rather known as variously the Goose Creek Salt Works (after the adjacent Goose Creek), the Union Salt Works, the Buffalo Lick Salt Works, or just The Salt Works. Its
post office A post office is a public facility and a retailer that provides mail services, such as accepting letters and parcels, providing post office boxes, and selling postage stamps, packaging, and stationery. Post offices may offer additional ser ...
was established on 1917-04-28 by postmaster James H. Brashear, and ''that'' was named Garrard, likely not after James or Daniel but rather after James' great-grandsons William Toulmin Garrard and Edward Gibson Garrard, who owned the land, although another story is that it was named after James' grandson
Theophilus T. Garrard Theophilus Toulmin Garrard (June 7, 1812 – March 15, 1902) was a politician, Union general in the American Civil War, farmer, and businessman. Early life and career Garrard was born in Clay County, Kentucky near Manchester at the Goose C ...
.


Garrard family connections

Members of the Garrard family born at the salt works include Eliza Ann Garrard (1809, daughter of Daniel), James H. Garrard, Theophilus T. Garrard, Edward Pendleton Garrard (1814), Maria Pacheco Padilla Garrard (1815), Margaret Garrard (1818, daughter of Daniel), Catherine Francis Garrard (1825), Lucinda C. Garrard (1827), Sophia Garrard (1830), and Pauline Mountjoy Garrard (1833).


19th century decline and Civil War destruction

The salt works were deliberately destroyed by the Union army in the
United States Civil War The American Civil War (April 12, 1861 – May 26, 1865; also known by other names) was a civil war in the United States. It was fought between the Union ("the North") and the Confederacy ("the South"), the latter formed by states ...
, as a preventative measure after the Confederate side had boasted of their value as a military objective with respect to anything else in the entire state of Kentucky. Confederate forces had captured Manchester in the summer of 1862 and had taken between of salt from the Garrard salt works and the works of their competitors the White family. A report of the commander of the brigade who re-took Manchester, Charles Craft, explained the need to destroy the works, saying that "every circumstance led to the belief that the quantity f salton hand would have been shortly taken" when his brigade left to fight elsewhere that it was needed, and that "as a matter of economy; the destruction of the works seemed to be a wise movement". It took 500 soldiers 36 hours, overseen by three colonels of the regiment. They disabled or destroyed all of the furnaces, pumps, and wells; and of salt found on the site. Cannon balls were forced into pipes; pumps removed, broken, and then pushed back into wells; and the salt dumped into rivers. A few "loyal citizens around and in the neighbourhood", as described in reports, were permitted to take some salt so that they had a supply for themselves. Theophilus T. Garrard requested compensation after the war from the federal government, but this was denied. Although rebuilt post-war, the salt works were not the major industry in the region that they had been pre-war, as competition from other saltworks elsewhere and improved transport drive down prices. The salt industry had been in decline even before the war. Although the Goose Creek Salt Works produced the same worth of salt in 1850 and 1860, the Garrards had had to diversity into increased farmland holdings, up from cultivated land and uncultivated in 1850 to cultivated and , although the valuation of these holdings had gone down from to . In 1850 they had 11 employees at the salt works and owned 37 slaves; but in 1860 owned 21 slaves. A continual pre-war problem for salt making at the Salt Works had been that Goose Creek river was only navigable at certain times of year for commercial shipping. Several largely ineffective steps were taken to improve navigability, with Daniel Garrard along with two others appointed river commissioners in 1810 with powers to unblock the river, and a subscription raising measure approved by the
Kentucky General Assembly The Kentucky General Assembly, also called the Kentucky Legislature, is the state legislature of the U.S. state of Kentucky. It comprises the Kentucky Senate and the Kentucky House of Representatives. The General Assembly meets annually in ...
in 1813. The most effective measure was Daniel Garrard using 32 of his "hands" (i.e. slaves) to clear the South Fork of the Kentucky River of obstacles in 1818. Several calls were made by Garrard and others to further improve matters, to legislators that did not heed them, in part because of national economic depression that began in 1838. A 1835 report by the Kentucky Board of Internal Improvements stated for example:


Railway

By the middle 20th century, Garrard railroad stop included a water supply tank, owned by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. It was west of the post office, and held , supplying per day to steam locomotives.


Cross-reference


Sources

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Further reading

* Unincorporated communities in Clay County, Kentucky Unincorporated communities in Kentucky Coal towns in Kentucky {{ClayCountyKY-geo-stub